Search smh:

Search in:

Catholic priest sorry for abuse: court

Melissa Iaria

A Catholic priest who sexually abused 15 schoolboys has become a sorry and shameful pariah, known wherever he goes as "the pedophile priest", a court has heard.

Frank Gerard Klep, 70, abused the boys at Salesian College Rupertswood from 1973 to 1984.

In the aftermath, he endured a spectacular fall from grace, the Victorian County Court heard on Tuesday.

Defence barrister Julie Sutherland says Klep's remorse was heartfelt and real, having told a friend he was "profoundly sorry and ashamed".

Advertisement

After his crimes surfaced, he was demoted, forbidden to work with children and stripped of his priesthood duties.

"He went almost, your honour, from priest to pariah and he has remained a pariah in so many respects," Ms Sutherland told the pre-sentence hearing.

"He, of course, wherever he goes, is known as pretty much the pedophile priest.

"His fall from grace has been spectacular."

Some of Klep's victims previously laid bare the trauma of their abuse in court.

Depression, substance abuse and failed relationships plagued them in the wake of Klep's crimes.

Klep preyed on many of the boys as they lay ill in the school's sick bay, which he operated.

Several awoke during the night to find Klep had removed their pants and was fondling their genitals.

One boy was pinned to his bed and raped.

However, Ms Sutherland argued Klep was of "otherwise good character" who did volunteer work for charities, the disadvantaged, the elderly and worked in Samoa with families with leprosy after being defrocked.

On Klep's return to Australia in 2004, he was reduced to being a volunteer mail clerk for the Salesians in a "complete fall from grace" before being arrested.

Ms Sutherland asked the court to acknowledge Klep's early guilty plea, his public shaming and the prospect he will die in jail.

Already on the sex offender's register for life, he showed a "moderately minimal" risk of reoffending.

Ms Sutherland said Klep has completed sex offender programs in jail and was advanced in his rehabilitation.

"He clearly has so much to give to the people in the community who could benefit by the help, by the comfort of this man," she said.